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Re: Cybercrime treaty
I've been busy grading finals and fielding "love bug" questions, and
I am way behind on email, so pardon my not responding sooner.
I need to look at the proposed language to clarify in my own mind
what it says before I do anything to act or advocate.
However, I think you folks are missing an important idea here -- if
the CVE board is concerned, then others will be too. Leverage your
concern and be activist in letting people know rather than in simply
trying to take ownership of this.
1) Jim Davis at Iowa is about to put out another issue of IEEE
Cipher. One of you should *immediately* write up a couple
paragraphs, include the URL and urge people to start talking to their
legislators in their home countries. Get it to Jim ASAP so others
can start in.
2) Send the same material to FIRST (send it to me and I will send it
on -- I belong to a FIRST member team). They are international and
generally well-connected with law enforcement. They also depend on
these tools.
3) After I look at the treaty myself, I can send the same material on
to people in Washington. I'm not sure who all is on this list, but
I think I am at least as well connected as anyone else here, and
maybe more so. In two weeks or less I'll be seeing Jeff Hunker and
Dick Clarke, so I will raise the topic with them. I also have
contacts inside OSTP, DoD, DoE, DoJ and elsewhere. If we get a
*succinct* statement, I can plant it where it will generate some
buzz. I have a pretty deep mailing list at this point.
4) I am also chair of ACM's public policy committee. I can lob it in
there to see if it sticks.
5) I can get it in front of other security educators. Besides Matt
and myself (on this list) there are dozens of other educators who
would be horrified if they could not use tools in classes and
research.
6) Get it in front of Bruce Schneier, Peter Neumann and Dave Farber
to get out to their mailing lists (Cryptogram, Risks, and Interesting
People, respectively). Those have major international coverage.
7) Each of us has other contacts. Let's start getting them in on
the act if there is indeed a reason for concern.
As someone who has been trying to be a bit of an activist for some
time, including DCMA and UCITA issues, I can tell you that your best
strategy is to get a short, factually accurate statement put
together, and get it out to other parties -- amplify your voice by
getting other reasonable (and sometimes not-so-reasonable) voices
heard along with your own. The longer you take to polish it
internally, the more you have lost a chance to get outside voices
swelling in unison with your own.
Cheers,
--spaf